Showing posts with label reconciliation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reconciliation. Show all posts

Friday, December 1, 2017

Bookkeepers and Accountants Are Not the Same


Your successful small business needs both a bookkeeper and an accountant. And there’s a reason why they won’t be the same person.

While some skilled bookkeepers and accountants may, in fact, be capable of doing each other’s work, an accountant’s services cost considerably more than a bookkeeper. There are other significant differences to be aware of.

A bookkeeper helps you maintain the ongoing financial recording of transactions to keep your business running smoothly. Specifically, they might:

  • Process and record invoices, receipts, payments, and other transactions
  • Process transactions for payroll and maintain those systems
  • Set up, maintain and review accounting systems and processes

Some bookkeepers (including me) may also look after these additional activities for you:

  • Reconcile accounts and prepare reconciliation reports
  • Manage accounts receivable and accounts payable
  • Prepare working financial statements

An accountant, on the other hand, provides analysis and professional advice, and keeps you compliant with laws and regulations. Specific activities which an accountant might do are:

  • Analyze performance and create financial projections
  • Provide tax advice and planning
  • Help with new business set-up
  • Audit records for compliance
  • Prepare financial reports
  • Give financial management advice

Both roles are extremely important to the success of your small business. They need to communicate well with each other in order for you to maximize on their contributions.

Thursday, January 26, 2017

Don't Mix Business with Personal


Here are 3 reasons why keeping your personal and business finances separate will also help keep you and your business healthy.

Finding, tracking, posting, filing, and reconciling your bank, credit card, and PayPal accounts - paper and electronic - becomes much more onerous and time consuming. You'll often have to chase down personal statements and dig through old purses for receipts to explain debits and credits. If you wait too long, the disappearing ink will confound your efforts even more. All of these things are guaranteed to make you feel overwhelmed.

Accurate information about your expenses on a regular basis will help you make better business decisions, otherwise you're flying by the seat of your pants. When your business and personal finances are muddled, you won't have a clear picture until tax time. Once a year is not the only time you need to make decisions. Inaccurate information can cause insecurity and indecision, detrimental to small business success.

If you keep your finances separate, you'll also find tax season much less stressful. Since less stress is good for your health, keeping personal and business systems separate also contributes to a healthy lifestyle. The impact of "tax stress" can be more than you might think.

If you are already suffering from these accounting ailments, get in touch. Untangling messes is one of my specialties.

Thursday, November 10, 2016

Just Because You Know How to Do Your Own Bookkeeping...


Are you still insisting that you do your own bookkeeping because you know how?

It is imperative that you maintain a current set of books. Canada Revenue Agency can audit you at any time with little notice. If you are not keeping up, think about the things happening around you that are causing you such unnecessary stress.

CRA is likely hounding you because you haven't filed last year’s taxes or, worse, HST and payroll remittances. They have likely decided to send you an assessment of what they feel you owe and it is due just like any other bill.

Your cash flow is suffering and now you need to take a loan out to cover expenses until your backlog of receivables and payables are cleared up. But, wait, you don't have any statements to show the lender. Your accountant is telling you to hire a bookkeeper if you can't keep up... in the end causing much stress and money that didn't have to be spent trying to get things caught up.

You haven't reconciled your bank accounts in months. Oopsie, was that an NSF charge on the last statement?

Your vendor won't ship your orders because you haven't paid for the last few. You swear you did but can't prove it.

Your clients are loving their extended credit terms! (Good for them, not you.)

Does this sound familiar? Don't try to be the expert in everything. Very few people can handle everything in a timely fashion and they are normally those workaholics we never want to be.

Just because you know how to do your own bookkeeping, doesn't mean you should.